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1 ners of the nose in disgust, or the mouth in happiness).
2 sing fearfulness, decreasing with increasing happiness).
3 r facial expressions in everyday life (e.g., happiness).
4  of subjective wellbeing (operationalized as happiness).
5  the contributions of reward and learning to happiness.
6 sical health, height, self-esteem, and later happiness.
7  teach that "living in the moment" increases happiness.
8 ral depression-related measures, and greater happiness.
9 ecause they also evoke feelings of hunger or happiness.
10 li morphed to display varying intensities of happiness.
11 ch as family life and health, reducing their happiness.
12  including sadness, anger and fear, than for happiness.
13  faces expressing varying degrees of fear or happiness.
14 n amygdala to facial expressions of fear and happiness.
15 lso of positive states, such as calmness and happiness.
16  could both amplify and initiate feelings of happiness.
17 a on environmental aesthetics and individual happiness.
18  as being more sociable-may reliably promote happiness.
19 es data, these variables have no relation to happiness.
20 vinces reported higher levels of experienced happiness.
21 ed with decreased cortisol levels and higher happiness.
22  innovative approaches to study personalized happiness.
23  the COVID-19 pandemic, along with increased happiness.
24 e less acidic the pH, the more they reported happiness.
25 l resources, including PsyCap, gratitude and happiness.
26 ap and two related constructs, gratitude and happiness.
27 he validity of current tools used to measure happiness.
28 time on chores than men, they reported lower happiness.
29 xperiments testing strategies for increasing happiness.
30 at link generous behaviour with increases in happiness.
31  affecting health, financial well-being, and happiness.
32 e emotion such as contentment, enthusiasm or happiness.
33  decisions is directly related to changes in happiness.
34 and show stronger increases in self-reported happiness.
35  against this time famine, thereby promoting happiness.
36 n linking commitment-induced generosity with happiness.
37 ecognizing facial expressions of surprise or happiness.
38 ships, and by changes in national subjective happiness.
39 ge activities performed with the partner and happiness.
40 or disadvantageous, reduce average momentary happiness.
41 , we show here an effect on both choices and happiness.
42 ribute to my scientific success and personal happiness.
43 in to the influences underpinning changes in happiness.
44 many past trials influence behaviour but not happiness.
45 es and has detrimental effects on health and happiness.
46 s that LTPA has a long-term association with happiness.
47 sgust," "anger," "sadness," "surprise," and "happiness."
48              Does prosocial behavior promote happiness?
49 urvey data tell us about the determinants of happiness?
50 ng time in beautiful settings boost people's happiness?
51 (0.06, 0.03 to 0.08, I(2)=48.1%, H(2)=1.93), happiness (0.09, 0.06 to 0.13, I(2)=67.0%, H(2)=3.03), a
52  and negative effect (0.526), and feeling of happiness (0.468) had a moderate positive correlation; a
53 0.023 higher life satisfaction, 0.039 higher happiness, 0.110 lower health status, 0.032 lower trust,
54 the urban population's reported low level of happiness(1-3).
55 tion; 0.80 [0.70-0.92], N=3831, p=0.0013 for happiness; 1.28 [1.11-1.48], N=3745, p=0.0007 for anxiet
56  mediated 58.2%), life satisfaction (80.1%), happiness (47.7%), and anxiety (32.4%) in girls, such th
57  particularly high performance for detecting happiness (55.8%) and sadness (60.2%).
58 res of sexual desire-most notably, increased happiness about sex (mean difference = 0.63 points [95%
59  impact of feedback on mood, alongside lower happiness about the number of online friends and lower h
60 ys, with anger more accurately inferred than happiness across species, perhaps hinting at an evolutio
61  evidence that working adults report greater happiness after spending money on a time-saving purchase
62 e that cash transfers substantially increase happiness among economically diverse individuals around
63  were strongly associated with self-reported happiness and also significantly associated with persona
64 how this negativity only for the emotions of happiness and anger, but not for fear or disgust.
65 s and untrustworthiness with the presence of happiness and anger, respectively.
66 ated associations between genetic scores for happiness and brain structure in ABCD (N = 9626, age ran
67 ives: the hedonic approach, which focuses on happiness and defines well-being in terms of pleasure at
68 st vividness and were associated with higher happiness and excitement ratings.
69 ess, and frustration-and 2 positive emotions-happiness and feeling in contro-on a 5-point scale of in
70 nterest as an emotion that can bring greater happiness and health.
71 with lower intrinsic motivation, lower visit happiness and higher visit anxiety.
72 en political ideology, self-enhancement, and happiness and illuminate the contradictory ways that hap
73 short-term in all three groups of countries, happiness and income go together, i.e., happiness tends
74  that the long term nil relationship between happiness and income holds also for a number of developi
75 laiming the time series relationship between happiness and income is positive, are the result either
76 l and physical health, but also encompassing happiness and life satisfaction, meaning and purpose, ch
77                                       Unlike happiness and meaning in life, openness to experience is
78 arge range of well-being measures, including happiness and mental health, well-being is high in youth
79 wards elicited both increasing self-reported happiness and NAcc activation, anticipation of increasin
80 spirituality was an independent predictor of happiness and positive health perceptions, even after co
81 ion and adjusting for potential confounders, happiness and related measures of wellbeing do not appea
82                               The pursuit of happiness and reward is an impetus for everyday human be
83 r concerned only with basic emotions such as happiness and sadness but also with so-called music-spec
84  that represent low threat emotions, such as happiness and sadness.
85 the Industrial Revolution produced increased happiness and subjective well-being that, in turn, fuele
86 of resentment and regret and lower levels of happiness and support compared to the consenting group.
87 ession combines muscle movements observed in happiness and surprised).
88 level appears to have a consistent effect on happiness and wellbeing measures throughout the lifespan
89 ur emotion categories (anger, disgust, fear, happiness) and neutral sounds under two conditions.
90  loneliness, sadness, enjoyment in life, and happiness) and somatic (sleep problems, low energy level
91 with participants reporting more confidence, happiness, and a changed outlook on life in general.
92 orrelated with increasing degree of fear, or happiness, and a second whose response primarily decreas
93 fe satisfaction, feeling life is worthwhile, happiness, and anxiety, rated from 1 to 10 by participan
94 serious disability, have a lasting effect on happiness, and do not simply deflect the average person
95 rt scale responses for self-reported health, happiness, and life satisfaction.
96 tions, especially between life satisfaction, happiness, and mental health.
97 c-related burden, reduced loneliness, higher happiness, and moderately higher salivary oxytocin level
98 ons that are variable and overlapping-anger, happiness, and sadness look and feel similar and are eas
99 nd emotional constructs such as fear, anger, happiness, and sadness.
100 unities covered basic emotions such as love, happiness, and sadness.
101 nces of only three emotion categories (fear, happiness, and surprise) were portrayed with moderate re
102 t high income buys life satisfaction but not happiness, and that low income is associated both with l
103 g-did significantly boost PsyCap, as well as happiness, and this effect was still visible 2 weeks lat
104 an be very disruptive to decision-making and happiness, and till date, it remains a puzzle why they h
105 ed personal life episodes marked by sadness, happiness, anger or fear.
106 ts were presented with facial expressions of happiness, anger, and fear.
107 ion (comfort/discomfort) and target emotion (happiness/anger) valence.
108      We showed the utility of a personalized happiness approach by testing associations between life
109 ss, showing the importance of a personalized happiness approach.
110 ng that the determinants and consequences of happiness are idiographic (that is, specific) to each in
111 wed that some dog emotions such as anger and happiness are recognized from early on, independently of
112 more subtle effects on frailty, activity and happiness as reported by owners.
113  and disadvantageous inequality on momentary happiness at the individual level predict a subject's ge
114 h vacant house at rates that depend on their happiness at their current location and that of their de
115                       We repeatedly measured happiness at various delays.
116 look forward to work (P < 0.001), and report happiness at work (P < 0.001) and a good program fit (P
117                                          Can happiness be reliably increased?
118 ures could not discriminate among degrees of happiness because of a ceiling effect.
119 does not bring with it a lasting increase in happiness because of the negative effect on utility of h
120 ple exaggerate the contribution of income to happiness because they focus, in part, on conventional a
121 0.892, SE = 0.432, t = -2.066; P = .001) and happiness (beta = -4.586, SE = 2.044, t = -2.24; P = .00
122                           A better theory of happiness builds on the evidence that adaptation and soc
123 eracts with climate in predicting individual happiness but not postmaterialism values.
124  orbitofrontal cortex and insula to implicit happiness, but a negative connectivity with the parahipp
125 at governments and organizations can improve happiness by providing underprivileged individuals with
126      The results indicate that self-reported happiness can be modulated, possibly due to changes in G
127 ns such as anger, fear, disgust, sadness, or happiness can significantly influence driving behavior a
128 that longer-lasting moods (e.g., depression, happiness) can be transferred through networks, although
129  Other mood states (anxiety, worry, sadness, happiness, challenge, feeling in control, or interest) d
130                       Subjective well-being, happiness, closeness to others, openness, and trust were
131 s self-reported life satisfaction, optimism, happiness, cognitive engagement, emotional regulation, p
132 reports of reduced mortality associated with happiness could be due to the increased mortality of peo
133                                     How much happiness could be gained if the world's wealth were dis
134 raw on two novel datasets: first, individual happiness data from the smartphone app, Mappiness, and s
135 s and illuminate the contradictory ways that happiness differences can manifest across behavior and s
136  with systematic changes in the shape of the happiness distribution.
137 long-term--usually a period of 10 y or more--happiness does not increase as a country's income rises.
138 with individual differences in self-reported happiness elicited by the reward cues.
139 d less spontaneous expressions of other-than-happiness emotions, but overall, they appeared more expr
140 h barrier-free communication and boost their happiness, enriches the diversity of lip-language transl
141 lm clips intended to provoke the emotions of happiness, fear, or disgust as well as a neutral state.
142 o generate facial expressions that represent happiness, fear, sadness, and anger.
143 al descriptors of a stimulus (e.g., level of happiness/fear in a face image), in this study, I demons
144      We created zip code level indicators of happiness, food, and physical activity culture from geol
145 yri for angry faces and decreased ratings of happiness for all stimuli, but no significant effect on
146 cipients in lower-income countries exhibited happiness gains three times larger than those in higher-
147               We estimated the total gain in happiness generated when a pair of high-net-worth donors
148 erosity of welfare state programs-increasing happiness going with increasing generosity and declining
149 in Asian culture and emphasizes low arousal, happiness, harmony, and an internal state of peacefulnes
150 ary approaches examining the determinants of happiness have posited that happiness is determined bidi
151 al expressions, and positive emotions beyond happiness have rarely been included.
152 of stress in everyday life and its impact on happiness, health, and cognition, little is known about
153 ween an SES composite and either health 'or' happiness; here we examine unique relationships between
154        Secondary outcomes were gratitude and happiness (immediate and medium-term) as well as volunta
155                              We suggest that happiness, impact, and longevity can be achieved with pr
156 howed an intact association between RPEs and happiness in a computational model of momentary mood dyn
157 ssessed the discrimination of both anger and happiness in healthy subjects receiving transcranial mag
158 nce of evaluating interventions that promote happiness in older populations.
159 ates, Germany and Italy, indicating relative happiness in response to national and international wars
160 motional reactivity in the form of momentary happiness in response to outcomes of a probabilistic rew
161 that uterus transplant would lead to greater happiness in transgender women.
162 nificantly boost gratitude (immediately) and happiness (in both the immediate and medium-term).
163                 The striking thing about the happiness-income paradox is that over the long-term--usu
164 in both prefrontal regions and self-reported happiness increased significantly over time in the activ
165  16489-16493] reported a flattening pattern: happiness increased steadily with log(income) up to a th
166 unction of movement, and find that expressed happiness increases logarithmically with distance from a
167                                              Happiness increases steadily with log(income) among happ
168 level factors such as life expectancy, world happiness index, country wealth, and income inequality p
169 or 0.046) standard deviation decrease in the happiness index.
170  well-being in countries with a higher World Happiness Index.
171                  A second experiment using a happiness induction procedure yielded similar results, s
172 atings of creativity, connectedness, energy, happiness, irritability, and wellness on dose days compa
173                          It is unproven that happiness is a direct cause of good health or that negat
174                                              Happiness is a fundamental human affective trait, but it
175 e-manifest Huntington's disease to date; and happiness is a positive emotion to contrast with disgust
176                                              Happiness is a valuable experience, and societies want t
177                                              Happiness is among the most fundamental of all human goa
178      Human feelings measured in integers (my happiness is an 8 out of 10, my pain 2 out of 6) have no
179        Recent studies suggest that momentary happiness is associated with reward prediction error, th
180  determinants of happiness have posited that happiness is determined bidirectionally by both top-down
181                                     Although happiness is influenced by life circumstances and popula
182                            Unlike behaviour, happiness is not sensitive to learning-irrelevant variab
183  when dynamic emotional stimuli are used and happiness is not the only positive emotion under study.
184                     Subjective well-being or happiness is often associated with wealth.
185 rm association between physical activity and happiness is well known, the long-term associations are
186 ategories--fear, anger, disgust, sadness, or happiness--is engaged by a study with 66% accuracy (43-8
187 n-verbal expressions of sadness (crying) and happiness (laughter) in a 32-participant, within-subject
188 monstrate that the genetic basis for general happiness level appears to have a consistent effect on h
189  differ as a function of countries' national happiness levels (collected from the World Happiness Rep
190 factors such as life expectancy and national happiness levels but overall, little variance in finding
191 l well-being, and suggest that high national happiness levels may have downsides for some.
192 their similarities in word use; estimate the happiness levels of states and cities; correlate highly-
193 ly-resolved demographic characteristics with happiness levels; and connect word choice and message le
194 ross stable and volatile learning tasks that happiness, like behaviour, is sensitive to learning-rele
195  to self-report higher life satisfaction and happiness, lower health status and trust, and more left-
196 rms of human facial expressions of anger and happiness may have coevolved with the regularity of conf
197 by activities performed with the partner and happiness, may have received the greatest benefits from
198 ence, 0.11; 95% CI, -0.04 to 0.27; P = .15), happiness (mean difference, -0.18; 95% CI, -0.37 to 0.00
199 uct LDpred-inf polygenic scores of a general happiness measure in 2 cohorts: the Adolescent Brain Cog
200 nd small yet significant correlations with a happiness measure in European participants in Add Health
201 ine associations with several well-being and happiness measures.
202 ave constructed a daily city-level expressed happiness metric based on the sentiment in the contents
203          Finally, depressive symptoms reduce happiness more in volatile than stable environments.
204                                The modulated happiness network included postcentral gyri, left caudat
205 stigating the relationship between money and happiness, no experimental work has quantified this effe
206 assenger to sit comfortably, to increase the happiness of a stranger, with no ulterior motives.
207                 The subjective well-being or happiness of individuals is an important metric for soci
208 f the allocation procedure would have on the happiness of receivers (studies 1-3).
209 sources in ways that do not maximize the net happiness of receivers.
210                                The expressed happiness of women and the residents of both the cleanes
211 wds of faces expressing different degrees of happiness or anger and different ratios of lighter-skinn
212 ility of high-order characteristics, such as happiness or education attainment.
213 onal MRI to clarify how the brain recognizes happiness or fear expressed by a whole body.
214 the set of mental states (e.g., experiencing happiness or fear) that can be reliably identified from
215 re unhappy, any robust evidence remains that happiness or related subjective measures of wellbeing di
216 r and crying are associated with feelings of happiness or sadness.
217            The top reason for gardening was "happiness or satisfaction", while "insufficient time" wa
218  aggregating momentary experience samples of happiness over a working day and was inversely related t
219 s does not lead to higher levels of reported happiness overall.
220 ), and improved temperament (p = 0.0039) and happiness (p = 0.021) after 6 weeks.
221 f their lives, includes what lay people call happiness, peace, fulfillment, and life satisfaction.
222 agnosed with a mental illness, as well as of happiness, personal success, professional success, and s
223                    We propose a personalized happiness perspective, suggesting that the determinants
224 Personality dispositions are associated with happiness, physical and psychological health, spirituali
225 ed coefficient = 0.06; 95% CI = 0.03, 0.08), happiness (pooled coefficient = 0.09; 95% CI = 0.06, 0.1
226 h the control group reporting slightly lower happiness post-intervention.
227 disease-associated modulation of disgust and happiness processing was negatively correlated with gene
228 g were associated with faster recognition of happiness, providing evidence for a facilitation of proc
229          A risky decision task with repeated happiness ratings as a measure of momentary mood was als
230 o assess liberal-conservative differences in happiness-related behavior (studies 2 to 4; N = 4936).
231  and inequality, lower creativity, and lower happiness relative to loose states.
232 l happiness levels (collected from the World Happiness Report).
233  Gallup World Poll and reported in the World Happiness Report.
234                             We conclude that happiness research stands on the brink of an exciting ne
235                        To prevent p-hacking, happiness researchers increasingly preregister their stu
236             Boosting dopamine also increased happiness resulting from some rewards.
237 ported a linear-log pattern in which average happiness rose consistently with log(income).
238 f two actors portraying four basic emotions (Happiness Sadness, Fear and Anger).
239  facial expressions of anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness and emotional neutrality and analyzed
240 c and reported (i) perceived emotions (e.g., happiness, sadness) as well as (ii) movie scene properti
241        There were 12 conditions per subject: happiness, sadness, and disgust and three control condit
242                                              Happiness, sadness, and disgust are three emotions that
243                                              Happiness, sadness, and disgust were each associated wit
244 ies regions of the brain that participate in happiness, sadness, and disgust, regions that distinguis
245 s and eight actresses showing four emotions: happiness, sadness, anger, and fear, each in posed and e
246 omparison subjects viewed facial displays of happiness, sadness, anger, fear, and disgust as well as
247 atisfaction), hedonic wellbeing (feelings of happiness, sadness, anger, stress, and pain), and eudemo
248 eeling each of six emotional states (relief, happiness, sadness, guilt, anger, and worry) after discl
249 ips that consistently induced disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, or a control neutral state.
250 essions of 6 emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, surprise) with the lower or upper fa
251  categories: anger, contempt, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, surprise, and neutral, coupled with
252  relationship between morality and momentary happiness/sense of purpose based on methodological conce
253  We raise the question of whether money buys happiness, separately for these two aspects of well-bein
254 pture individual differences in personalized happiness, showing the importance of a personalized happ
255 ces among countries in the overall change in happiness since the early 1980s have been due chiefly to
256  affectionate touch reports and individuals' happiness, stress levels, pandemic-related burden, and c
257 eport asked women to self-rate their health, happiness, stress, feelings of control, and whether they
258 ocused on the study of six basic categories--happiness, surprise, anger, sadness, fear, and disgust.
259 ze facial expressions of six basic emotions: happiness, surprise, fear, anger, disgust, and sadness.
260 (APC-SAS), followed by PsyCap, gratitude and happiness surveys.
261 ies, happiness and income go together, i.e., happiness tends to fall in economic contractions and ris
262 ted stronger amygdala reactivity to implicit happiness than fear, whereas walking did the opposite.
263 gher levels of life satisfaction and overall happiness than men, they experience worse outcomes in me
264 and normal participants, and less subjective happiness than normals; and had a faster subjective sens
265 rosocial behavior led to significantly lower happiness than obtaining the money.
266  results in terms of unhappiness rather than happiness; their measures could not discriminate among d
267 direct effects that carry the influence from happiness to income.
268 s overcome the allure of short-term gains in happiness to maximize long-term welfare.
269 task with periodic measurements of momentary happiness to quantify mood dynamics.
270 nd/or quality of the environment are driving happiness trends, but in the long-term, time-series data
271 cal views, personality traits, intelligence, happiness, use of addictive substances, parental separat
272                                              Happiness was also inversely related to heart rate asses
273  (mean difference, 6.652; P = .001) and when happiness was below average (mean difference, 7.000; P =
274                                              Happiness was distinguished from sadness by greater acti
275 ailty and owner-reported activity levels and happiness was higher in the full dose group than other g
276 disgust, fear, sadness and surprise (but not happiness) was associated with estimated years to clinic
277 ions and repeatedly reported their momentary happiness, we show here an effect on both choices and ha
278           In an intensive study of momentary happiness, we show that, in fact, longer time spent in h
279                           Disgust, anger and happiness were chosen as emotions of interest.
280 nges in mood states (energy, tension, focus, happiness) were assessed before and after each condition
281 , agreeability, activities with partner, and happiness) were assessed for moderation of the influence
282 or immoral deeds had the strongest impact on happiness, whereas committing moral or immoral deeds had
283      Generous behaviour is known to increase happiness, which could thereby motivate generosity.
284 istinct-anger looks and feels different from happiness, which looks and feels different from sadness.
285 n-looking virtual agents expressed anger and happiness while gazing at the participant or at another
286 f-identified gender (93% female, p = 0.031), happiness with current weight (80% dissatisfied with the
287 ing with increasing generosity and declining happiness with declining generosity.
288 ssociations between lower genetic scores for happiness with smaller structural brain phenotypes in a
289 ife, quality of health, level of energy, and happiness with surgery were 9, 9, 8, and 10 of 10, respe
290 y of network selection and the level of user happiness, with UMTS being the best option for conversat
291       Weather significantly impacts mood and happiness, yet observing this at scale and differentiati

 
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